When you inhale, the diaphragm and intercostal muscles contract, expanding the chest cavity. This expansion increases the volume of the lungs, causing a decrease in air pressure within them. Air moves from an area of higher pressure (outside the body) to an area of lower pressure (inside the lungs), resulting in inhalation.
When you crush a plastic bottle, you decrease the volume inside the bottle. This increase in pressure (due to the decrease in volume) is what makes the bottle crush. The atmospheric pressure outside the bottle remains constant, causing the bottle to collapse under the increased pressure inside.
An increase in temperature generally causes the volume of a gas to expand or increase, as the gas particles gain kinetic energy and move more rapidly, pushing against the walls of the container. Conversely, a decrease in temperature typically leads to a decrease in volume, as the gas particles lose kinetic energy and move more slowly, resulting in less pressure on the container walls.
An increase in temperature makes the air molecules inside a balloon move faster and spread out, increasing pressure and causing the balloon to expand. Conversely, a decrease in temperature will cause the air molecules inside the balloon to slow down and contract, causing the balloon to deflate.
As a balloon rises, the air pressure decreases, causing the gas inside the balloon to expand. This expansion of gas makes the balloon's volume increase, causing it to rise further. Additionally, the decrease in temperature also affects the density of the gas inside the balloon, contributing to its ascent.
A pipette controller is a piece of laboratory equipment that makes use of air pressure to accurately dispense liquids from a pipette. By controlling the air pressure within the device, users can efficiently and precisely transfer liquids in scientific experiments.
When you inhale, oxygen fills your lungs. Next the oxygen diffuses out of your lungs into your bloodstream. The diffusion of oxygen from the lungs causes less pressure in your lungs signaling your brain that you need to inhale.
are lungs and oxogent
I believe that the pressure from the diaphragm causes our lungs inflate, thus we inhale and when the diaphragm deflates, it makes us exhale.--------------------------------------------------------------------- As your diaphragm or intercoastal muscles contract the size of the lungs increases. This creates a pressure difference between your lungs and the surrounding atmosphere. By increasing the size of the lungs you create a low pressure environment in the lungs by expanding the same amount of gas to a larger area. this pressure difference doesn't have to be much 1mmhg is more then enough, the main thing is just that you need a difference in preasure. Air flows from high preasure to low preasure, so by decreasing the preasure in the lungs air flows into the lungs. as you breath out you make the lungs smaller by relaxing the muscles and diaphragm, making the volume in the lungs decrease, thus increasing the preasure and moving the air from inside the lungs out to the surrounding atmosphere.
Lungs does not look after the cancer because the lungs do more than 500 jobs in your body,cancer makes you die and makes people cut their hair off
The diapragm is most important to the respiratory process. Your diaphragm pulls down when you inhale, opening your lungs up and letting air in. Your trachea is what brings athe air from your nose to your lungs. Nose, pharynx, larynx, trachea, bronchi, lungs, and diapragm are all involved.
Actually the ribs are moving outward and expanding as the lungs fill with air. The expansion of the ribs makes room for more air to enter the lungs.
its all by pressure, our diaphragm (muscle in our chest) contracts and relaxes causing high and low pressure and makes the lungs expand etc, think of a balloon in a jar and you can controll the pressure on the outside of the balloon, it will inflate and deflte
gettin g shanked makes yo heart slow down and blood pressure decrease
The diaphragm is the primary muscle involved with breathing. When you want to take a breath in (inhale) you contract your diaphragm. This makes the thoracic cavity larger, decreasing the pressure in the thoracic cavity and generating a vacuum. Air is drawn into the lungs because of the creation of this intra-thoracic vacuum. When you relax your diaphragm the elasticity of your lungs will force air back out (exhalation).
The diafragm moves downward and the intercostal muscles contract pushing the chest outward and upward causing negative pressure in the lung structure - air will allways move from a high pressure area to a low pressure area, hence, into the lungs.
AnswerAir is actually forced into the lungs by atmospheric pressure. But here's the rest of the story. The diaphragm, a muscle below the lungs, contracts and actually makes the space in which the lungs are located, the thorax, get bigger. When this space gets bigger, the pressure inside it decreases. There is now a difference in pressure between the lung cavity and the outside air with the outside air having more pressure. Air goes from where the pressure is higher to where it is lower, and so it goes into the lungs. That's called inspiration or inhaling. When the diaphragm relaxes, the thorax gets smaller and the pressure increases in the lungs and air is forced out. Click the link for more information.
Through its nose.